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D. Di Giacomo and D. Storchak Recent developments of the ISC Seimic Event Bibliography or .

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D. Di Giacomo and D. Storchak Recent developments of the ISC Seimic Event Bibliography www.isc.ac.uk/event_bibliography/index.php or http://colossus.iris.washington.edu/event_bibliography/index.php IUGG 2015 Prague, Session S03
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Page 1: D. Di Giacomo and D. Storchak Recent developments of the ISC Seimic Event Bibliography  or .

D. Di Giacomo and D. Storchak

Recent developments of the ISC Seimic Event Bibliography

www.isc.ac.uk/event_bibliography/index.phpor

http://colossus.iris.washington.edu/event_bibliography/index.php

IUGG 2015 Prague, Session S03

Page 2: D. Di Giacomo and D. Storchak Recent developments of the ISC Seimic Event Bibliography  or .

Motivation

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Great East Japan earthquake 2011?

Fukushima? Tohoku tsunami?

Higashiihon daishinsai?

Tohoku earthquake?

Sendai earthquake?

• Seismologists often need to identify scientific articles related to specific seismic events that occurred at particular times or in specific regions.

• Most advanced bibliographical searches such as Google Scholar would require them to type a text string containing a commonly used name for the earthquake or the region and date it occurred.

• The search may need to be repeated several times to account for all possible transliterations of a place name in English, several different ways of specifying a date and a variety of names of the area where the earthquake has occurred.

• The results then have to be merged and the unavoidable duplicates removed. The procedure is daunting and often leads to unstable results.

Page 3: D. Di Giacomo and D. Storchak Recent developments of the ISC Seimic Event Bibliography  or .

ISC Event Bibliography: What does it do?

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• Search for references of scientific publications associated with seismic events in the ISC Bulletin;

• Publications regard both natural and anthropogenic events;

• The link between references and seismic events within the ISC Bulletin allows users to perform an interactive search based on event parameters (location, time, magnitude, etc.) and/or publication parameters (author name, journal, year of publication, etc.).

Page 4: D. Di Giacomo and D. Storchak Recent developments of the ISC Seimic Event Bibliography  or .

Example from the great Tohoku earthquake, 2011Link to ISC Bulletin

Event parameters

Total number of papers linked

Link to the paper abstract webpage via the DOI

Page 5: D. Di Giacomo and D. Storchak Recent developments of the ISC Seimic Event Bibliography  or .

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• The database covers about last 50 years of publications (from nearly 500 titles) relevant to seismic events; also significant events in the first part of last century are included;

• Publications dealing with catalogues and/or large dataset in a specific region are not included;

• Most of the events are linked to one or two papers, few to some hundreds;

• Ongoing work to add missing references (Authors are encouraged to check for missing publications and contact us).

• As of June 2015, the ISC Event Bibliography includes over 17,000 papers associated to ~14,200 seismic events (natural or man-made);

Content of the ISC Event Bibliography

Page 6: D. Di Giacomo and D. Storchak Recent developments of the ISC Seimic Event Bibliography  or .

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• Not surprisingly, events with many references are in Japan, Euro-Mediterranean and U.S. West coast areas;

• Some events attracted the attention of many researches in various geoscience disciplines (with a few having several hundreds publications linked).

Most referenced

events

Page 7: D. Di Giacomo and D. Storchak Recent developments of the ISC Seimic Event Bibliography  or .

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• With rare exceptions, we include only publications with English title and abstract;

• We make no judgement of the quality of the articles.

• Currently we follow ~280 journals, not limited to seismology…

First 20 Journals with more poublications

Page 8: D. Di Giacomo and D. Storchak Recent developments of the ISC Seimic Event Bibliography  or .

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The ISC Event Bibliography is not limited to publications in• Seismology

but also:

• Earthquake engineering• Tectonics• Structural geology• Geodesy• Remote sensing• Nuclear test monitoring• Tsunami and coastal studies• Landslides• Environmental studies• Hydrology• Geochemistry• Atmospheric sciences• Geomagnetism• etc.

Various geoscience fields

Page 9: D. Di Giacomo and D. Storchak Recent developments of the ISC Seimic Event Bibliography  or .

Submit a missing article

9www.isc.ac.uk/event_bibliography/submit.php/

Page 10: D. Di Giacomo and D. Storchak Recent developments of the ISC Seimic Event Bibliography  or .

Summary We linked event parameters in the ISC Bulletin with publications dealing with specific seismic

events (natural or man-made). This association allows user to perform interactive searches based on event parameters (location, time) and/or publication parameters (author, journal, year of publication);

Links to the ISC Bulletin data and, if available, to the paper abstract via the DOI or to the journal homepage;

Articles describing catalogues and/or large datasets are not included;

Ongoing work to find and add missing references; authors are encouraged to let us know for missing papers by contacting us or using our submission form at: www.isc.ac.uk/event_bibliography/submit.php/

The ISC Event Bibliography is multidisciplinary and is an attractive tool for researchers and students from different fields;

This new ISC service is expected to facilitate the work of authors, reviewers and

journal editors during the entire process of scientific article publication.

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Visit www.isc.ac.uk/event_bibliography/index.php

orhttp://colossus.iris.washington.edu/event_bibliography/index.php


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